The present invention concerns an optical molecular sensing device and related method. The optical molecular sensing device has an optical resonator adapted to be connected to an excitation source. The excitation source may be a laser operating at a 2.7-2.8 um spectral range. The optical molecular sensing device has an emission spectrum comprised of a plurality wavelengths. Also included are a detection unit and a rf frequency counter to detect at least one rf beat note resulting from detecting the emission spectrum of the optical resonator. A change in frequency of the rf beat note indicates the presence of a target molecule.
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14. A method of detecting the presence of a target molecule comprising the steps of:
generating an optical output from an optical source comprised of a plurality wavelengths from a source that allows interaction of the optical field with at least one target molecule;
monitoring at least one rf beat note resulting from detection of the optical output in the absence of a target molecule; and
measuring a change in frequency of said rf beat note indicating the presence of a target molecule.
1. An optical molecular sensing device, comprising:
an optical resonator adapted to be connected to an excitation source;
said optical resonator having an emission spectrum comprised of a plurality wavelengths in the mid-infrared; and
a detection unit and a rf frequency counter adapted to detect an rf beat note frequency resulting from detecting the emission spectrum of said optical resonator in the absence of a target molecule and a change in frequency of said rf beat note resulting from the presence of the target molecule.
8. An optical molecular sensing device, comprising:
an optical resonator adapted to be connected to an excitation source;
said excitation source is a laser operating at a 2.7-2.8 um spectral range;
said optical resonator having an emission spectrum comprised of a plurality wavelengths; and
a detection unit and a rf frequency counter adapted to detect an rf beat note frequency resulting from detecting the emission spectrum of said optical resonator resonator in the absence of a target molecule and a change in frequency of said rf beat note resulting from the presence of the target molecule.
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/953,891, filed Mar. 16, 2014 and herein incorporated by reference.
This invention was made with government support under United States Air Force Office of Scientific Research grant FA9550-12-1-0049 and National Science Foundation grant ECCS-1232263. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Not applicable.
High optical quality (high-Q) whispering gallery mode (WGM) microresonators have been a subject of intense investigation during the last decade because of their strong potential for numerous high-performance photonic devices, including ultra-sensitive molecular detectors and advanced light sources, such as narrow linewidth lasers and comb generators. The unique characteristics of such WGM devices appear to be particularly relevant for mid-infrared (MIR) applications, because of the stronger molecular absorption lines in the MIR, and because of the increasing need for frequency comb sources in this “molecular fingerprint” region. In particular, prior efforts have estimated a sensitivity of a few parts per trillion for the detection of several strongly-absorbing atmospheric and biogenic trace gases in this MIR “molecular fingerprint” region by combining the sensitivity benefits of wavelength modulation spectroscopy with high-Q MIR microsensors in compact “field-usable devices”, facilitating their use for numerous applications in industry, environmental sensing, and agriculture. Such miniature portable “ultra-sensitive” molecular sensors could pave the way for numerous cutting-edge uses in diverse fields and applications such as: (1) breath analysis of patients for healthcare; (2) process control systems (such as ultrasensitive moisture monitoring) in manufacturing; (3) environmental monitoring of industrial pollutants, including hydrogen sulphide and carbon monoxide levels (say on roadsides and in parking structures); (4) the precise monitoring of trace gases that affect the environment, such as CO2 and other greenhouse gases, biogenic emissions from flora and fauna, coastal and oceanic carbon and nitrogen compounds, and geothermal and volcanic emissions; and (5) measurements of emissions from agricultural enterprises including crop growth and livestock farming (e.g., ammonia emissions).
There have also been considerable advances in the development of Whispering-Gallery mode (WGM) microlasers in the past decade as key enablers for numerous high-performance photonic devices, including ultrasensitive molecular detectors and compact narrow-linewidth lasers. Most of the past WGM microlaser developments have focused on visible and near-IR sources.
Whispering-gallery-mode (WGM) microlasers are particularly attractive and popular, largely because of their relative ease of fabrication (as opposed to their electrically pumped semiconductor counterparts, which require much more elaborate design and fabrication processes. Even though optically pumped microlasers have been demonstrated with a broad range of glass and crystal hosts, spherical and toroidal structures, based on the rare-earth-doped silica material system, are the most common, in part, because of the ease of fabrication of such structures via simple melting techniques.
Unfortunately, silica-based microlasers are limited in their operating wavelength ranges to the visible and near-IR because of the strong increase in absorption in silica at wavelengths >2 μm. However, because of the stronger molecular absorption bands in the mid-infrared (MIR), ultra compact, microlaser sources at longer MIR wavelengths are still critically needed for several key applications, notably high-resolution spectroscopy and trace level detection of several important molecular species. Previous mid-IR WGM microlasers have been based on electrically pumped semiconductor sources that are difficult to fabricate and are also limited to operation either at cryogenic temperatures, or in the pulsed mode at relatively short (2.4 μm) MIR wavelengths.
In one embodiment, the present invention exploits the strong dispersion of resonant modes near molecular absorption lines, and reduces the cost and complexity of molecular sensors by eliminating the need for tunable lasers; moreover, the detection speed of the present invention is much faster, and limited only by the cavity buildup time (typically of the order of nanoseconds or less), enabling “real time” monitoring. In addition, other embodiments of the microlaser of the present invention are not based on electrically-pumped semiconductor sources or require cryogenic temperatures to operate. Embodiments of the present invention are able to operate in temperature from 32 degrees below zero and higher.
In other embodiments, the present invention provides a room temperature MIR WGM microlaser operating in the 2.7-2.8 um spectral range where there are a plethora of molecular absorption lines. This embodiment was achieved by fabricating high-Q erbium-doped ZBLAN microspheres and optically pumping such Er:ZBLAN microspheres with a 980 nm diode laser. Using elevated erbium concentrations enables mid-IR WGM laser generation.
In another embodiment, the present invention provides a continuous-wave (cw) room temperature (RT) mid-IR WGM microlaser system capable of operating at a spectral range (2.7-2.8 μm) that overlaps strong transitions of several molecular species of significant interest for sensing applications. Applications for the embodiments of the present invention include, but are not limited to, detection at trace levels for: (1) environmental sensing (NO2, CO2, CO, H2S, and AsH3), (2) industrial process monitoring (trace water vapor levels for semiconductor fab and fiber preform manufacturing), and (3) health care (including breath analysis). In one embodiment, the cw MIR microlasers may be achieved by optically pumping high-Q WGM spherical erbium-doped fluoride glass microresonators with a low-power 980 nm diode laser.
In the drawings, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, like numerals may describe substantially similar components throughout the several views. Like numerals having different letter suffixes may represent different instances of substantially similar components. The drawings illustrate generally, by way of example, but not by way of limitation, a detailed description of certain embodiments discussed in the present document.
Detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention, which may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed method, structure or system. Further, the terms and phrases used herein are not intended to be limiting, but rather to provide an understandable description of the invention.
In the formation of microlasers, glasses are particularly attractive as host media because of the relative ease of shaping and “processing” glass hosts into high-Q resonators via relatively simple polishing and melting techniques. However, the relatively robust and popular silicate glasses are precluded from use at MIR laser wavelengths >2 μm (because of their relatively high absorption at the longer wavelengths). Nevertheless, numerous fluoride, telluride, and chalcogenide glasses are attractive choices of glass hosts for MIR lasers because of their relatively high transparency, even at wavelengths >4 μm, provided they are “formable” into high-Q resonators and can also act as “good solvents” or solid-state hosts for sufficiently high doping densities of the appropriate rare-earth ions for the requisite gain at the desired MIR wavelengths.
A method of fabricating high-Q microspheres is disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/960,659, filed Aug. 6, 2013, the disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. High-Q microspheres may be made from fluoride glasses including ZBLAN (ZrF4—BaF2—LaF3—AlF3—NaF), a fluoride glass characterized by relatively high glass stability, and with known high solubility for a large number of well-understood MIR rare-earth dopants, notably erbium, holmium, praesodymium, and dysprosium. As such, ZBLAN represents a suitable host glass for use in connection with one or more embodiments of the present invention.
In addition, embodiments of the present invention may use erbium (Er) as the gain ion.
For some embodiments of the microlasers of the present invention, a maximum erbium ion solubility that is readily achievable (8 mol. %) to enhance the ETU1 cross-relaxation (CR) process via dipole-dipole energy transfer between closely spaced erbium ions that have been simultaneously excited to the 4I13/2 state (via optical pumping) is provided. The higher doping densities and CR processes facilitate population inversion between the 4I11/2 and 4I13/2 levels to enable attainment of extremely high gains per unit length at this 2.7 μm transition, even with relatively low pump powers.
In other embodiments, microspheres were fabricated using uniformly doped (8 mol. %) Er:ZBLAN fibers of 100 μm diameter and no cladding, using a controlled symmetric heating process. It should be noted, however, that these doping densities are still too low to have significant effect on the thermal and crystallization properties of the Er:ZBLAN glass.
The mid-IR radiation was detected by a liquid nitrogen-cooled InSb MIR detector 208. To improve the signal-to-noise ratio of the observed signal, the photocurrent was amplified by a transimpedance amplifier 210 and measured using a lock-in amplifier 212.
Based on the measured value of the quality factor at 1.5 μm, a Q of >107 may be obtained for an undoped ZBLAN microsphere in the 2.5-3.8 μm wavelength range. Assuming a minimal increase in scattering losses, since there is negligible anticipated Er ion (excited state) absorption in this wavelength range, the Q of the Er-doped microspheres is comparable (>106) at these MIR wavelengths. Emission 222 is a known upconversion fluorescence from the 2H11/2 and 4S3/2 levels to the ground state of erbium ions. The confinement of emission 222 to the equatorial plane near the micro-sphere surface provided a strong visual verification of the coupling of the 980 nm pump to the WGMs.
Since the same fiber taper was used to couple in the 980 nm pump power and to couple out the 2.7 μm mid-IR laser power, simultaneous phase matching was not possible, and the use of two couplers such as two fiber tapers on opposite sides of the microsphere would be preferable in other embodiments. The threshold pump power is estimated to be 150 μW by extrapolation of the linear lasing region. The estimated slope efficiency is 0.35%. During these measurements, the microsphere was kept in continuous contact with the fiber taper to reduce the power variations due to coupling gap instabilities; however, the mid-IR power also appeared to have a maximum value at this close contact (zero gap) position (indicating that the fiber taper is not thin enough, and that the 980 nm pump radiation was still undercoupled even when the taper is in close contact). Varying the distance of these coupling gaps would be preferable in other embodiments of this invention.
In another embodiment, optimized coupling using a single mode fiber taper and a tunable narrow linewidth 980 pump laser may be used to improve the slope efficiency while reducing the threshold power. In addition, the larger threshold power, compared with the previous results reported for visible and near-IR WGM microlasers, are attributable to the relatively low gains that are inevitable at lower pump intensities when significant cross-relaxation via ETU processes are not yet possible (because of the relatively low populations in these excited states at threshold pump powers). The use of higher pump powers are preferable in alternate embodiments.
Additionally, in other embodiments, the output power may become oscillatory due to thermo-optomechanical coupling. For passive ZBLAN microspheres pumped in the near-IR regime, these oscillations can translate quality factor degradation and resonant wavelength shifts to variations of oscillation frequency. As such, the frequency of the self-excited mid-IR thermo-optomechanical oscillator will be sensitive to the concentration of molecules with absorption lines near the laser wavelength.
As shown in
Using the fabrication method of the present invention, and the principles developed in the context of MIR fiber lasers, lasing near the 2.7 micron transition in Er:ZBLAN in mid-IR microresonator-based lasers is achieved. When sufficient pump power (at 980 nm) is coupled to a uniformly doped Er:ZBLAN microresonator, the combination of the population inversion (between the 4I11/2 and 4I13/2 states) and high-Q MIR resonance results in low-threshold laser action near 2700 nm with extremely narrow linewidths.
In another embodiment, the present invention provides a microresonator that utilizes the interaction between the evanescent field of a resonant optical source and the gas molecules. The optical source 900 may be an active high-Q optical microresonator with a structured emission spectrum consisting of nearly-equally spaced narrow lines 901-904, as well as sensing unit or detector 920 as shown in
Active microresonator 900 is excited by an optical beam (excitation) from a microlaser as described above, another type of laser, or another source. Depending on the level of excitation of microresonator 900 may operate below lasing threshold (where the linewidth of the emission lines is limited by the quality factor of the cavity) or above lasing threshold (where the linewidth of the emission lines is limited by spontaneous emission). Near the central frequency (v0) of a molecular absorption line, the collective polarization of gas molecules manifests itself as a complex refractive index featuring rapid and large variations in both the real and imaginary parts.
As a result, the resonances with wavelengths shorter than λ0=c/v0 shift to lower wavelengths while those with wavelengths longer than λ0 move to even longer wavelengths. Such a bi-directional wavelength shift due to the rapid variation in the dispersion near the molecular absorption peak increases the non-uniformity of the mode spacing near λ0, while the quality factor degradation broadens the linewidth and changes the coupling strengths of the modes.
Although Whispering-Gallery mode (WGM) microlasers and luminescent sources are the best choices for the implementation of the present invention (due to their compact size and large quality factor), all other high-Q resonant sources with at least two modes near the molecular absorption region, can also be used. Since the strongest absorption lines of the important gas molecules are usually in the mid-IR spectral region, the present invention is much more effective when the optical emission is in the mid-IR spectral range (for example the mid-IR emission from Erbium doped ZBLAN microspheres). In other embodiments, the wavelength of the resonant source is approximately matched to the molecular absorption region of one or more molecules to be detected.
A band-pass optical filter is used to select two resonant lines (from the comb-like emission spectrum) within the absorption bandwidth of the target molecule. Alternatively, the source naturally emits only two lines. In other embodiments, the source emits a plurality of lines that are nearly identical in wavelength and spacing.
When interacting with the gas molecules, the two lines or line pair 1202 and 1203 move in opposite directions thereby increasing the distance between the two as shown by arrows 1212 and 1214. In addition, the changed lines 1220 and 1221, become broader and smaller in height. One or more of these changes may be monitored in the RF domain by detecting the emission in a photodetector 1200 and feeding the photocurrent to an RF frequency monitoring device (e.g. RF spectrum analyzer).
As shown in
A shown in
where a is the field loss coefficient of the cavity, θ=2πRneff/λ designates the phase shift per circulation, and t represents the coupling losses at the resonator/fiber taper coupling region. λ is the wavelength of input laser. The total effective loss coefficient at for propagating mode is related to a through a=exp(−πRαt). The total loss depends on the intrinsic loss of the cavity due to material absorption and the absorption of the gas molecules through,
αt=αi+Γαg
where αi is the intrinsic cavity loss and Γαg denotes the absorption from the gas molecules (Γ: is the ratio of the energy in the evanescent field and the circulating energy inside the cavity). The spectrum of Pt consists of a series of Lorenzian shaped dips with resonant wavelength λr, is defined by,
mλr=2πRneff
where neff=n1+Γn2 is the effective index of refraction of the circulating mode. n1 and n2 represent the refractive indices of dielectric microcavity and the surrounding environment, respectively. The resonance shift Δλ associated with the change of Δngas can be written as:
The linewidth of the resonant dips (δλ=λ/Qtot) limits the resolution for measuring Δλ, therefore Δλ/δλ quantifying the detection limit. For a dielectric microresonator with index of ˜1.5 and the surrounding medium with an index ˜1, Γ is estimated to be 1% (varies from 1% to 5% depending on the size and type of the microresonator).
At a low gas concentration, Δngas is much smaller than the cavity/surrounding index difference, and thus the mode distribution doesn't change (Γ is constant). A possible approach for enhancing the sensitivity and the detection limit is monitoring the wavelength near absorption band of the corresponding molecule. Meanwhile, large absorption brings the quality factor degradation, resulting in decreasing of Δλres/δλ, as shown in
The dispersion of a gas molecule undergoes a local maximum and a minimum across the absorption line, as shown in
Here Δnr(ω) is the refractive index change (dispersion) compared to unit value. When the laser wavelength is in resonance (θ=2πRneff/λ=2πm). The dip depth can be quantified as,
where K=Qint/Qext=κ2/2πRαt. Here Qext=4π2Rneff/(λκ2), Qint=2πneff/λαt and κ is the coupling coefficient from the fiber taper to the cavity.
At a low gas concentration (Γαg<<αi), the absorption caused by the presence of gas induces a change in the dip depth according to:
In one embodiment, the interaction between the electromagnetic fields in a microresonator with Q=5×108 (αi=0.044 m−1) and carbon dioxide (CO2) molecules in gas phase at room temperature was examined. CO2 has a characteristically strong absorption band extending from 4.2 to 4.5 μm with strong peaks present at 4.23 and 4.28 μm. In this embodiment, it was determined to probe the absorption line of CO2, centered at 4234.66 nm where the absorption line strength is strongest. The absorption spectrum of CO2, obtained from the HITRAN 2008 database is shown in
α(v)=S·g(v)·N
where S (cm/#) is extracted from the HITRAN database as shown in
where v is wavenumber in unit of cm−1, v0 is the resonant wavenumber and γ is the broadening parameter including the air-broadening and self-broadening effects (v0 and γ can be extracted from HITRAN database).
In
In the undercoupled regime (Qint<Qext), when the gas molecules interact with the WGMs, the decreasing of Qint leads to a reduction of dip depth. Meanwhile, the presence of gas molecules brings out the change of effective index, which induces the shift of resonant modes.
Typically, the resonant wavelength shift is employed as the sensing parameter. Combining Eq. (2) and Qtot=λr/δλ, Δλ/δλ can be written as,
where δλ is the linewidth of optical resonator mode.
The concentration of gas molecules can also be derived by monitoring the relative changes of transmission dip depth (dM/M).
In addition to monitoring the aforementioned spectral changes (frequency shift and amplitude variations) directly, translation of such spectral interpretation caused by the surrounding gas molecules into the RF domain (GHz) is an alternative highly desirable and reliable method that may be used for use of very precise and accurate molecular sensing. As shown in
In the various embodiments described above, the present invention provides a detection mechanism based on frequency shifts; this method is more reliable than one employing amplitude changes due to the fact that the amplitude is dependent of relative intensity noise (RIN) of the laser, and instability of the PZT controlling the coupling gap, which determines the ultimate optical Q. Moreover, if the two laser lines are tuned, for example, via thermal effects, in other embodiments, the present invention is able to identify the gas molecule among several mixed gases by observing the shift of RF signal, making this approach a potential method for directly probing molecules.
In other embodiment, the microresonators of the present invention use, but are not limited to, the above described microlasers. In addition, the present invention may use two adjacent laser lines, which are located in the local maximum and minimum target gas dispersion, to generate the RF beat note. Beating these two neighboring longitudinal modes requires increasing of the radius of the microresonator up to ˜7 mm in which the evanescent field percent (F) decreases. Therefore the RF beat note of two adjacent azimuthal modes in a multimode microspherical laser is able to maintain the ultra-compact dimension of the microsphere while having relatively more evanescent field to interact with gas molecules and thereby decreases the detection limit.
While it is well known that the WGMs of different azimuthal mode orders in an ideal microsphere are degenerate, the fabricated microspheres are rarely perfectly spherical symmetric. This eccentricity is defined as e=(Rp−Re)/R, where Rp and Re are polar and equatorial radii respectively. The presence of eccentricity breaks the degeneracy of polar modes, leading to a frequency shift for the modes with the same radial and longitudinal modes number. Eccentric splitting between modes with successive azimuthal mode number is defined by:
where n, m, l are radial, longitudinal and azimuthal mode numbers, respectively. The amplitude of each mode is dependent of the coupling between the fiber taper and the microsphere.
In one embodiment, the radius of the eccentricity of the microsphere were chosen to be 15.257 μm and 0.428% such that the frequencies of the fundamental mode (|l−m|=0) and the adjacent azimuthal mode (|l−m|=1) are able to match the locations of the maximum and minimum of the CO2 dispersion at 2702.578 nm at which the Mid-IR microlaser is lasing. Two TM modes are employed since they have larger evanescent field than TE ones. The electromagnetic field distributions of these two successive TM modes are depicted in
The optical signals are separated by the desired frequency fRF, which is the resulting beat frequency of the two incident electric fields. When the incident electric field has components at two frequencies, the electric field can be given by,
E=A1 cos(2πv1t)+A2 cos(2πv2t+φ)
where φ is the relative phase offset of the second signal. A1 and A2 designate the amplitudes of these two optical components. t is time. The current in the photodiode is proportional to the incident electric field through,
where η is the photodiode responsivity. The first three items given by the above equation represent two signals at dc and one at the differenced frequency fRF=|v1−v2|. The other signals are at optical frequencies which beyond the responding wavelength of RFSA.
From the analysis above, the sensitivity is limited by the linewidth of RF beat note (RBW), δfRF. Since the exact RF beat note position is determined by the cavity resonances, its noise is principally dependent of the phase noise characteristics in optical domain of the cavity resonances and ultimately by the quantum noise of the lasing mode, namely the Schawlow-Townes linewidth.
That the two lasing lines share a common cavity enables the cancellation of any optical frequency fluctuations caused by the vibration or thermal drift of the cavity length when the two frequencies are differenced, so that the beat-frequency noise will only depends on the uncorrelated noise on each optical tone. RBW can be translated directly from the relative optical linewidth (δvOPT/vOPT),
δfRF/fRF=δvOPT/vOPT
where δvOPT is the optical linewidth of the laser sources and vOPT is the optical frequency.
Below threshold power (spontaneous emission), relative optical linewidth δvOPT/vOPT is determined by the intrinsic cavity loss (δvOPT/vOPT=1/Q). The dispersion of CO2 molecules gives vOPT=110.05 THz and fRF=|v1−v2|=10.315 GHz. The Qint of 5e8 results in RWB of 20.63 Hz. On the other hand, the linewidth of the stimulated emission above the lasing threshold dramatically decreases because of the high coherence of the lasing light. The linewidth narrowing is consistent with lasing process and should continue until the system reaches the ultimate quantum-limited variance of the optical frequency due to spontaneous emission, which is known as the Schawlow-Townes limit,
where μ is the spontaneous emission factor, which is around 600. v is the cavity lasing frequency. h is the Plank's constant, and Pout represents the output power of the lasing cavity. The above equation indicates that Δvlaser is inversely proportional to the output laser power Pout, intrinsic quality factor and external Q, which leads to the fact that the narrow linewidth happens in the strongly undercoupled regime.
For Qext=1e9 and Pout=2 μW, the laser linewidth from the cavity is estimated to be 2.56 Hz, resulting in RBW=0.24 mHz. However, the jitter of the laser lines and the resolution of the detection set the ultimate limitation of RBW and the stability of the RF beatnote. Stable RF beatnote with RBW of 10 mHz is reasonably achievable. Similar with the aforementioned analysis, 1 ppm CO2 at 2701.578 nm induces the frequency shift of 63 Hz, which corresponds to the RF shift of 126 Hz. Assuming ΔfRF/δfRF=1 is detectable, the present invention is able to readily obtain the minimum detectable absorption coefficient (MDA) of 2e-8 cm−1, which corresponds to 79 part per trillion (ppt) of gas concentration detection limit (CDL). If a similar microlaser is able to be lasing around 4234 nm, where CO2 has the maximum absorption line strength (around two orders of magnitude lager), the resulting CDL is improved two orders of magnitude.
In other embodiments, the present invention provides a gas detection system that takes advantage of the resonant molecular absorption induced effects on Mid-IR WGM spectra, based on the two existing sensing mechanism. The large gas absorption resonance and different dispersion behaviors across the absorption resonance enables the identification of the component of gases with relatively high detection sensitivity. By employing the method of monitoring the shift of RF beat note of two laser lines, a detection limit of 8 ppt level is attained in the strongly undercoupled regime, which allows the independence of sensitivity on technical noise. A further improvement of sensitivity can be achieved by increasing the interaction factor Γ. As a result, the embodiments of the present invention are able to function as optical gas sensors for identification of unclear gas with ultra-high sensitivity in a wide range of applications.
In yet another embodiment, the present invention provides an optical molecular sensing device, comprising an optical resonator adapted to be connected to an excitation source. The optical resonator has an emission spectrum comprised of a plurality of wavelengths whose individual emission bandwidths are much narrower than the spacing between any two adjacent wavelengths. In addition, a detection unit and a RF frequency counter to detect at least one RF beat note resulting from detecting the emission spectrum of the optical resonator may be used.
A target molecule is detected by a change in frequency of the RF beat note indicating the presence of a target molecule. In addition, the emission spectrum of the device may be within the absorption region of one or more target molecules and be comb-like, consisting of lines of nearly identical height and spacing.
A tunable filter may also be used to remove all lines of the emission spectrum other than two successive lines and where the absorption of the target molecule is within the two successive lines. The presence of the target molecule causes an increase in line spacing and line broadening. This change is detected by measuring the RF beat note between the two successive lines to indicate the presence of a target molecule.
In other embodiments, the excitation source may be a laser operating at a 2.7-2.8 um spectral range or another source that is capable of generating an optical output comprised of a plurality of wavelengths at narrowband emissions, such that these interact with at least one target molecule.
In other embodiments, the laser operates at a temperature greater than 0 degrees Celsius and may also include one or more Er:ZBLAN microspheres coupled to a 980 nm laser. The one or more Er:ZBLAN microspheres may be uniformly doped with Er densities of greater than 1 mole percent.
In other embodiments, the present invention provides a method of detecting the presence of a target molecule comprising the steps of monitoring at least one RF beat note resulting from detection of the optical output. Measuring a change in frequency of the RF beat note indicating the presence of a target molecule. In addition, the method may include the removal of all lines of the output other than two successive lines, with the absorption of the target molecule being within the two successive lines.
The change in the RF beat note may be generated by the interaction of target molecules and the optical field due to the asymmetric polarization response of the target molecule in the vicinity of its absorption line. An increase in line spacing and line broadening caused by the presence of the target molecule is then detected by measuring the RF beat note between the two successive lines.
In other embodiments of the invention, different mid-infrared host glasses such as chalcogenide, telluride, or other fluoride glasses may be used for the microresonators to be used in the present invention.
In other embodiments of this invention, different rare-earth (such as Dysprosium, Presodymium, Holmium and Terbium) and transition metal dopants (such as Fe) may be used individually or as plural co-dopants, preferably at high doping densities (above 0.5%) to result in mid-infrared light emitting sources at other wavelengths optimized for the sensing of other molecules such as moisture (water vapor), methane, nitrogen oxide, and hydrogen sulfide, as needed for appropriate applications such as healthcare monitoring, industrial process monitoring, and environmental monitoring.
While the foregoing written description enables one of ordinary skill to make and use what is considered presently to be the best mode thereof, those of ordinary skill will understand and appreciate the existence of variations, combinations, and equivalents of the specific embodiment, method, and examples herein. The disclosure should therefore not be limited by the above described embodiments, methods, and examples, but by all embodiments and methods within the scope and spirit of the disclosure.
Jain, Ravinder, Hossein-Zadeh, Mani
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